On the heels of the bread-baking success, I wondered if I could apply this Dutch oven baking technique to other doughs. I’ve been feeling the urge to make my own pizza lately, but lacking a baking stone, I had pretty much given up on it. With my new found confidence, I thought “why couldn’t the same technique be used to reproduce a pizza oven?” Unsure of what such a technique would do to pizza toppings, I decided to try my hand at calzone. I pieced together a dough recipe using eggs on sunday and Cook’s Illustrated as references.

The cat was distracting me as I was carefully converting the amounts, and somehow I accidentally put in too much water, had to double all the flour, and ended up with twice as much dough as I had intended to make. But no big deal, I divided it into thirds and froze the two extra balls of dough for later use. The hard part was doing all the kneading by hand – try kneading for 15 minutes straight sometime, it’s tiring! Anyway, once the dough was mixed, kneaded, divided, and rested, I rolled it out into a circle about the diameter of my Dutch oven. I spread half of it with the last of the leftoverBolognaise sauce, sprinkled on some shredded Mozzarella (which Nick was shocked to see came from Germany, as German products are somewhat scarce around here – some unpleasantness in the ’40’s, I understand), Grana Padano, smoked ham, oregano, chili flakes, and topped it all off with more cheese.

Then I folded the other half of the dough over the filling and crimped the edges. To finish it off, I brushed the calzone with olive oil, sprinkled it with sea salt, and cut a few shallow slashes in the top.

Obviously, I’d been preheating the oven this whole time, with the Dutch oven inside, so both were nice and hot. Using parchment paper this time (not a towel!) I transferred the calzone to the Dutch oven, put the lid on, and placed it in the oven. Half an hour later, when it came out, I was treated to this:

Like this:

Today, I am playing a favorite game among bloggers: Make Fun of Ridiculous Searches. While I should probably just be happy that I’m getting some traffic, I can’t help but laugh at some of these. They are all actual, unedited, search terms that have resulted in someone viewing my blog. If you wrote one of these, don’t take it personally, it’s all in good fun.

1. where is polenta in the grocery store

A: Yes.

2. what can you use if you don’t have a sha

A: Don’t you hate it when you run out of sha? I mean, when the search engine cuts off your query? For the sake of argument, I have come up with some possible endings to this question, and some answers to the resulting questions.

…shaker? Well, James Bond aside, I always went with Auntie Mame on this one anyway. “Stirred, never shaken, bruises the gin.”

A: You mean like open hearth baking? I’ve never tried that. However, I’m afraid that what you need is some help conjugating verbs. Not my area of expertise.

4. how to draw a croque

A: From my French-English dictionary: croquer (verb): 1. to crunch; 2. to sketch. Not sure how you would go about drawing that. A croquis is a sketch, but as far as I can tell, there is no tangible object that goes by the name “croque.” And “how to draw a sketch” is a bit redundant, is it not?

5. finding bugs in soup

A: Ok, so this isn’t exactly a question, but it is my favorite search term so far. I laughed out loud when I saw it, because I know exactly why this person was directed to my site, and yet they couldn’t possibly have found what they were looking for. If you’re out there, I have a question for you: why are you Googling this? (Or Ask-ing, or Yahoo!-ing, or whatever it is you kids do these days.) Are you looking for bugs in your soup? Do you want them there? Are you one of those litigious types trying to find a restaurant to sue? Are you an entomologist who studies the rare soup-dwelling onion beetle?

Well, that was fun. See you next time!

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Yes, roasting a chicken is very easy. But do you know what’s even easier? Buying a fresh rotisserie chicken hot from the oven. And some potatoes from the bottom of the rotisserie, where they’ve been soaking up chickeny goodness most of the day.

This picture was taken at the butcher that is closest to my apartment, but almost every butcher in town has one of these outside his shop. I do not recommend walking down the street hungry in Paris, as you will be assaulted at least every 3 minutes with the delicious aroma of roasting chickens. I believe I’ve said this before, but it bears repeating: the chickens here in France are just plain tastier than their American brethren. Chalk it up to farming practices or whatever, all I know is that I won’t touch a pre-roasted chicken in the States, and here I eat them at least twice a month. (Apologies to my American readers.)

Note the price (if you can decipher that crazy French handwriting, that is): 5 euros. The sign says 2 euros for potatoes, but sometimes they’ll just throw a handful into the bag with the chicken for free. Throw together a salad and you’ve got dinner for 2-3 people in no time, for pocket change.

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And now, the long-awaited Véronique Mauclerc post! I won’t be putting up any pictures of her breads, because they’d just make mine look bad. Well, that, and I don’t have any decent pictures of them. But they are something special, I will tell you that. The first one I tried was a hazelnut, almond, and pistachio bread that was to die for, especially toasted and buttered with jam on top. Apparently, Véronique Mauclerc has one of only four wood-burning ovens in Paris! In it she and her team bake large loaves of bread using organic flours and natural yeast (levain). What was interesting to me in her shop, the first time I went, was that the breads are not necessarily sold whole. Many of them are too large for a family to eat in a couple of days, so they are sold by weight. You tell the woman at the counter how big of a piece you want, and she cuts the bread and weighs it. If you want it sliced, she’ll do that, too. I have since learned that this is the way bread is sold by many artisan bakers, but I still find the concept kind of novel.

Of course, no boulangerie is complete without at least a small selection of pastries. The pastries are usually of a more rustic style than you would find at a pâtisserie, but that doesn’t mean that they’re any less tasty.

Take, for example, this lemon tart. The tart shell itself was filled with a buttery cookie-like substance, rendering what was essentially a thick shortbread cookie for the base. And then there’s that gorgeous slab of bruléed lemon curd perched on top. Not too sweet, not too tart, with a firm yet creamy texture.

I realize that I am about a year and a half late to be posting on the topic of the no-knead bread, but I’m excited about it, so I’m writing about it anyway. Cook’s Illustrated recently put their noses to the grindstone to attempt to improve the sometimes unpredictable results. I combined some of their findings with Clotilde’s legworkin the American-to-French kitchen conversion department to come up with a workable recipe for my own Parisian apartment kitchen.

The major question (and a valid one) is: why bother baking bread when you live in Paris and can walk to half a dozen bakeries in 3 minutes? Well, because I enjoy it, for one. I love the magic of bread making. You start with flour, salt, yeast, and water, and end up with something that is much greater than the sum of its parts. There is something immensely satisfying about pulling a fresh loaf of bread from your oven. Yes, it takes time, but doesn’t that then justify cutting an extra slice or two, slathering them with salted butter and devouring them with abandon? Hey, you’ve earned it.

So the no-knead bread appealed to me, not only because of the lack of physical effort/Kitchen Aid ownership required, but because I actually have all the necessary equipment in my kitchen! Bowl, wooden spoon, scale, Dutch oven. That’s about it. I suppose you could get away without using a scale, but it really is a more accurate way to measure things like flour and salt.

Anyway, the day before you want to eat the bread, make the dough. I used 320 grams of organic T65 flour (unbleached all-purpose is probably the closest American equivalent), 150 grams of whole wheat flour, 10 grams of sea salt, and 1/4 teaspoon (eyeballed) of instant yeast. I moistened this mixture with 350 grams of room-temperature bottled water (yes, I weighed that too). The dough seemed a little dry, so I added a bit more. I was looking for a shaggy ball of dough to form, which it did. I left it in the bowl, covered it with plastic wrap and a dishtowel, and placed it in the coolest part of the apartment. I let it sit for about 18 hours while the yeast did its thing.

Here it has approximately doubled in size, and you can see many small bubbles on the surface. The dough was quite wet, but not unlike other bread doughs I’ve worked with in the past. I heavily floured a cutting board and dumped out the dough.

I’m tempted to refer to this as a poolish*, although technically a poolish would not be a complete bread dough, as this is. Of course, what I don’t know about the intricacies of bread making could fill many books, I’m sure.

At any rate, with well-floured hands I formed this dough into a rough rectangle and folded it in thirds. I rotated it 90 degrees and folded it in thirds again. I returned the dough to the bowl, replaced the plastic wrap and dishtowel, and waited another hour. The folding process was repeated and another half-hour rest period ensued. One more set of folds and this time I lined the bowl with a clean towel** and placed my lackadaisically shaped loaf inside to proof.

At this point I began to heat the oven to 230 C with my Dutch oven inside. Half an hour later, the oven and pot were hot and the bread was proofed. I used the towel** to transport the dough into the pot and attempted to cut a few decorative slashes into the top of the bread. So right before going into the oven, it looked like this…

Like this:

Last January, before we left the U.S. for France, Nick and I did a “Farewell Tour” of the West coast, visiting friends and family in what was essentially a month-long road trip. (Nothing like spending a month in a car with someone and then moving into a tiny Parisian apartment!) On our night in San Diego, our friends took us to a little hole-in-the-wall Thai place in Pacific Beach. The food was great, but one dish stood out: the green curry with avocado. Now, I highly doubt that avocado is a traditional Thai ingredient (correct me if I’m wrong), but given the avocado’s popularity in Southern California, they incorporated it into their menu. And with excellent results. The creaminess of the avocado worked really well with the heat of the chilies and the sweetness of the coconut milk. The idea stuck with me, so when I found some Thai green curry paste a few weeks ago, I vowed to give it a shot. (For some reason, avocados are exceptionally cheap here. I don’t know why. But when I can buy 6 avocados for 2 euros, I don’t ask questions.)

At any rate, the other day I realized that I had both avocados and green curry paste in my kitchen. It’s go time. I procured chicken, coconut milk, mint, and cilantro, and while I was at the Asian market I found these awesome long beans.

They were labeled “Thai long beans.” How, or if, they are different from Chinese long beans I don’t know. The one time I have tasted Chinese long beans, I found them to be slightly bitter in flavor. These had a pleasant vegetal aroma and a flavor that bordered on grassy. Close enough to regular green beans so as to be accessible, but different enough to feel mildly exotic. Anyway, I wanted them in the curry too, so I cut them into bite-size lengths and sautéed them in peanut oil over high heat. When they had formed a few brown spots, I removed them to a bowl and added coconut milk and green curry paste to the hot pan. I whisked these together and seasoned the mixture with fish sauce and sugar.

Once the mixture had thickened a bit, I stirred in thinly sliced chicken breast. I let this simmer until the chicken was done, then I returned the beans to the pan along with thick slices of avocado. When everything was warmed through I turned off the heat and added copious amounts of cilantro and mint leaves. I adjusted the seasoning with lime juice, and served my California curry over brown rice. Just the way the hippies like it!

Here’s the story. I found this recipe on Cooking the Hard Way, and my first thought was “I haven’t had a hunk of chocolate cake in a long time.” Like since December. This may not sound strange, but I used to eat chocolate cake almost every day. (Hey, I worked in a bakery. There were scraps.) Anyway, I was struck by a powerful craving. A closer examination of the ingredients revealed nothing exotic (i.e. buttermilk – the hallmark of a good devil’s food cake). I had most of the ingredients already, just sitting in my cupboard or fridge. So, for the first time in more than three years, I found myself making a different chocolate cake.

The first step says to melt unsweetened chocolate, butter, sugar, and water together. I was skeptical. I know what chocolate and water can do to each other, and it’s not pretty. Resisting the urge to rewrite the recipe, I followed the directions, figuring that if it was a total disaster I would have the smug satisfaction of knowing I was right. Well, the chocolate/sugar/butter/water mixture did indeed turn out to be grainy and broken, but I guess if it’s just going into a batter it’s not that important.

I whisked in the combination of milk and cider vinegar (a buttermilk substitute if I ever heard one), followed by the egg and vanilla. Last came the dry ingredients and my batter was ready. It was really thin, but that didn’t worry me. My old standby has a fairly liquid batter as well.

The recipe called for a bundt pan, which I don’t have, so I just poured the batter into the only baking vessel I own. (If you read this blog even semi-regularly, you’ve probably seen many pictures of my beloved Emile Henry stoneware baking dish. It was one of the very first purchases I made upon arriving in Paris, and I use it for everything from roasting chicken to breakfast strata.)

All the English-to-metric converting makes me nervous, and as a result I check baking progress every 10 minutes. After 30 minutes (which is what the recipe said), the cake had risen and it smelled terrific.

The toothpick test told me it was done, so I took it out and let it cool. This was a challenge, as I am a total warm-cake junkie. But I didn’t want to spoil my dinner, so I gritted my teeth and waited.

In lieu of frosting, I simply served square slices of cake with mint-chocolate chip ice cream. I noticed that the chips were made of actual chocolate, and not that godawful “chocolatey” stuff that is becoming so prevalent in American ice creams. But back to the cake. It was good, nice and moist with a decent amount of chocolate flavor. It’s no boutique chocolate cake, but it’ll do.